Pictured: The New York woman who pulled two men from the path of an oncoming subway train after they fell on tracks

When a drunken man fell onto the tracks of a Manhattan subway on Thursday, all Doreen Winkler could think about was Ki-Suck Han, the man killed after being pushed
into the path of an oncoming train on Monday.

'Not again,' she said. 'The whole time in my head, not again. I kept thinking I’m going to watch him die.'

Along with two other women, Ms Winkler, from Brooklyn, pulled the man plus another Good Samaritan who got into trouble out of the path of an oncoming train at Bowling Green station in lower Manhattan.

Hero: Doreen Winkler helped pull two men from the path of an oncoming subway train

Not again: Winkler said she thought of Han's tragic death as she saw the train coming

The harrowing experience began as the 5'2 Winkler was waiting for a train at the station to head to a wine tasting session uptown.

That's when she spotted a drunken man laying on his back in the middle of the tracks. He was later identified asJack Simmons, 64, a drifter from the Bronx.

Winkler was terrified she wouldn't be able to pull the larger man out on her own and asked a man nearby to jump down and pull him out.

'This guy jumps down on the tracks,' Winkler told the Daily News.'And he’s pushing him, trying to get him to stand up.'

But when the second man landed on the tracks a train appeared.

'I glanced up and see the lights of an approaching train on the uptown
side, and glance back and now there are TWO people on the tracks,' said another witness Margaret Besheer.

In the dock: Naeem Davis, right, stands in front of Judge Lynn Kotler during his arraignment on murder charges yesterday

In the dock: Homeless suspect Naeem Davis, pictured at an earlier court hearing, say he pushed the victim in front of the train because he was still angry over losing his boots two days earlier

The unidentified hero and Simmons made it to the platform after Winkler and two other women pulled them out.

'I had one arm each of each man,' Winkler said.'I was freaking out that nobody was helping at first.'

Once they had the men on safe ground, the unidentified hero broke down in tears.

'Thank you, I thought I was going to die,' he told her as they hugged on the platform.

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'This is not about attention ... it’s about what everybody should do,' Ms Winkler said. 'I don’t understand how people can just stand there and watch
and not help.'

The story first made the news as recounted by According to to Voice of America
journalist Margaret Besheer, who witnessed the scene of a
disoriented man sitting between the rails as a train came.

She said: 'People on the platform started to scream: ''A train is coming!''

Deadly: New Yorkers saved a disoriented man sitting between the rails as a train barreled towards him

Grisly death: 58-year-old Ki Suk Han was killed by a subway train after being pushed into its path in Times Square on Monday

As the crowd yelled, Besheer said a man got down on the tracks to help the man to his feet. The train stopped before it even
entered the station and cheers broke out as the men pulled themselves to
safety on the platform.

The heroic rescue comes just days after Ki-Suck Han was shoved onto the subway tracks in the path of an oncoming train.

Han's death has been hotly debated
as, rather than help pull him out of the path of the oncoming train,
some people only recorded his horrific death with their cell phone
cameras.

An image on the cover of the New York Post showing Han's doomed struggle has been the subject of national controversy.

Naeem Davis, accused of shoving Han
on the tracks, is in Riker's Island and told reporters he hopes to cut a
plea deal for manslaughter.